U.N. finds traces of enriched uranium
VIENNA, Austria – U.N. inspectors have found traces of highly enriched uranium on equipment from an Iranian research center linked to the military, diplomats said Friday – a revelation likely to strengthen U.S. arguments that Tehran wants to develop nuclear arms.
The diplomats, who demanded anonymity in exchange for divulging the confidential information, cautioned that confirmation still had to come through other laboratory tests.
Initially, they said the density of enrichment appeared to be close to or above the level used to make nuclear warheads. But later a diplomat accredited to the International Atomic Energy Agency said it was below that, although higher than the low-enriched material used to generate power and heading toward weapons-grade level.
Still, they said, further analysis could show that the find matches others established to have come from abroad. The IAEA determined earlier traces of highly enriched uranium were imported on equipment from Pakistan that Iran bought on the black market during nearly two decades of clandestine activity.
Even then, nevertheless, the find would be significant.
Because Iran has previously denied conducting enrichment-related activities at the site, the mere fact the traces came from there bolsters arguments that it has hidden parts of a program that can create the fissile material used in nuclear warheads. Additionally, the site’s connection to the military weakens Iranian arguments that its nuclear program is purely civilian.
The development, however, was unlikely to result in an immediate American push for strong U.N. Security Council action against Tehran.
The Americans recently agreed to put such efforts on hold and give new European-led attempts to find a negotiated solution a chance in the face of fierce Russian and Chinese opposition to a strong signal from the council.
Despite their declared support for the European effort to persuade Iran to give up enrichment, the Americans are ignoring calls for direct contacts with Iran – a stance criticized Friday by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
Calling on “all sides to lower the rhetoric,” Annan said Washington should “come to the table” and join the Europeans and Iranians.
Iran’s president remained defiant. He accused the Americans of “waging a propaganda campaign” against his country. “The people of Iran and the country are not afraid of them,” President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told Islamic leaders in Indonesia.